Showing posts with label Tripolis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tripolis. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Swiss President Defends Apology in Libya Dispute

ASSOCIATED PRESS: BERN, Switzerland — Swiss President Hans-Rudolf Merz defended his apology to Libya for the arrest of Moammar Gadhafi's son, saying Friday it was the only way to secure the release of two Swiss citizens detained by Tripoli.

The apology was heavily criticized in the Swiss media, but welcomed by companies eager to do business in the oil-rich North African country.

"My mission was to ensure that we can work through what happened in Geneva, to get the two Swiss out of Libya — that was my primary aim," Merz told reporters in the capital Bern.

Tripoli cut business and diplomatic ties with the Alpine nation after Hannibal Gadhafi and his wife were arrested July 15, 2008, in a Geneva luxury hotel for allegedly beating up two of their servants. The servants later withdrew their complaint after receiving compensation from an undisclosed source.

Four days after the arrest Libya also detained two employees of engineering company ABB Ltd. — Max Goeldi and Rachid Hamdani — for alleged breaches of immigration rules. Swiss media have described them as "hostages" that Tripoli was using to force an apology from Switzerland. >>> Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press | Friday, August 21, 2009

NZZ ONLINE:
Flugzeug nach Libyen unterwegs: Landung in Tripolis vor 18 Uhr zu erwarten>>> sda | Dienstag, 25. August 2009

Friday, August 21, 2009

Libyen verlangt Repatriierung des Lockerbie-Attentäters

ber. Kairo, 8. Mai

NZZ ONLINE: Das Regime in Tripolis hat Grossbritannien gebeten, den in einem schottischen Gefängnis einsitzenden libyschen Häftling Abdulbaset al-Magrahi in seine Heimat ausreisen zu lassen. Magrahi war 2001 als Miturheber des Anschlags auf ein amerikanisches Verkehrsflugzeug über der schottischen Ortschaft Lockerbie zu 27 Jahren Haft verurteilt worden. Libyen machte geltend, Magrahi habe wegen eines Prostatakrebses nur noch wenige Monate zu leben. Ein erst vor wenigen Tagen ratifiziertes Abkommen regelt den Gefangenenaustausch zwischen Libyen und Grossbritannien; es könnte es den Briten erlauben, Magrahi loszuwerden und nach Libyen abzuschieben. >>> | Samstag, 09. Mai 2009